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Charles Augustus Strong (November 28, 1862 – January 23, 1940) was an American philosopher and psychologist. He spent the earlier part of his career teaching in the United States, but after his wife died, in 1906 he settled with their daughter in Italy, near Florence.
C. A. STRONG: REALIST AND PANPSYCHIST I Charles Augustus Strong was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts, on November 28, 1862. His education and training were extensive and thorough both in the United States and in Europe. From 1881 to 1883 he studied at the G tersloh Gymnasium. In 1884 he received his A.B. degree from the University of Rochester ...
It combines this with an exposition of some of the work of Charles Augustus Strong—who is, according to this account, an exemplary, genuinely realistic materialist. C. A. Strong, who has been almost entirely forgotten, is one of the very best twentieth-century American philosophers.
- The Site
- The Philosopher
- The Visionaries
- The Villa’s Enduring Spirit
Villa Le Balze, or “The Cliffs” in Italian, clings to the side of a steep hill at the southern edge of the ancient settlement of Fiesole and overlooks the broad valley of the River Arno. Fiesole is immensely rich in architectural heritage with Etruscan ruins, a Roman amphitheater and temple, an 11th-century cathedral, and numerous Renaissance build...
Charles Augustus Strong was born in 1862, the son of Dr. Augustus Hopkins Strong, president of the Baptist Theological Seminary at Rochester and author of Systemic Theology, a text that remained in print for more than a century. His father’s position in the church led to a friendship with John D. Rockefeller, whose daughter Elizabeth would later ma...
Cecil Pinsent was born in Montevideo in 1885 and did his architectural studies in England. After completing his education, he moved to Tuscany where, in 1907, the 21-year-old earned an invitation to make alterations and suggest additions to the Villa Gattaia, home of Strong’s Harvard friend Charles Loeser, a skilled art connoisseur. The Loeser comm...
After the war, Margaret, anxious that her father’s house should not fall into disrepair, set in place a skeleton staff which would remain for 35 years until, in December of 1979, she donated the Villa, gardens, and all remaining contents to Georgetown University to become the Charles Augustus Strong Center for scholarship. Some timely preservation ...
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Citation. Strong, C. A. (1903). Why the mind has a body. MacMillan Co. https:// https://doi.org/10.1037/11632-000. Abstract. The reader will find in this book (1) a sketch of an explanation of the connection of mind and body; (2) a proposal, based thereon, for a settlement of the controversy between the parallelists and the interactionists.
20. Juli 2021 · (1) It examines an early account by Charles Augustus Strong of why The Myth is a myth. (2) It maintains that a natural and naturalistic version of empiricism is compatible with the fact that the Myth is a myth. (3) It gives proper place to enactivist (physiological, motor) considerations.
6. Sept. 2019 · by. Strong, Charles Augustus, 1862-1940. Publication date. 1923. Topics. Knowledge, Theory of. Publisher. [London] : Archibald Constable & Co.